The Indian rupee weakened to its all-time low for the sixth consecutive trading session on Tuesday as a rise in US bond yields boosted the dollar and strong demand for the greenback from importers added to the lingering pressure on the local currency.
The rupee declined to 85.2075 against the US dollar, eclipsing its previous record low of 85.12 hit on Monday. It ended the session at 85.20, down 0.1 per cent on the day.
The Reserve Bank of India's intervention, likely via dollar sales, again helped limit the rupee's losses, traders said, reports Reuters.
However, the "RBI doesn't seem to defending any level right now but is just curbing volatility, which signals steady rupee depreciation will continue," a trader at a state-run bank said.
A multitude of factors have hurt the rupee this quarter, including tepid capital flows, a widening of India's trade deficit, concerns about slowing economic growth and, most recently, a hawkish shift in the Federal Reserve's outlook for benchmark interest rates.
The dollar, already boosted by the anticipation of US President-elect Donald Trump's return to the White House in January, has climbed further, alongside US bond yields, after the Fed scaled back its projected rate cuts over 2025 at its December meeting.
The 10-year US Treasury yield rose to a near seven-month high of 4.59 per cent on Monday and was little changed in Asia trading.
The dollar index was up slightly at 108.2 and has risen over 2 per cent so far this month, on course for its third consecutive monthly rise.
Given the host of negative global and domestic cues, "the rupee is likely to witness a slow and steady deprecation from these levels," said Dilip Parmar, a foreign exchange research analyst at HDFC Securities.
Parmar expects the rupee to weaken to 85.50 over the next two weeks.
Indian financial markets will be closed on Wednesday for the Christmas holiday.